Hi, long time follower here for more than 10 years. I've listened to all of your podcasts and some of them 2 or 3 times.😊 Congratulations to you and your wife for newborn.🎉 Please keep up the good work❤
@spacewad87458 ай бұрын
obligatory congratulations on the arrival of your son. may he grow up to become brave and kind.
@Wkumar078 ай бұрын
I'm a dad myself. Congratulations 👏🏿
@safi140818 ай бұрын
Congrats on being a dad, buddy. I've been keeping up with you for years, started with you working in a factory or something (if I'm not wrong, as far as I can recall) and trying to find the wisest man that ever lived, and I think you found Plato first. (Again correct me if I'm wrong, you mentioned this somewhere from years) and now you're a father and episode 200 is coming soon. I'm happy for you and thanks.
@TennesseeJed8 ай бұрын
Congratulations! That is one lucky new human to have a brilliant father to raise him.
@TennesseeJed8 ай бұрын
What was that Žižek movie again?
@TennesseeJed8 ай бұрын
I found it and watched! The Pervert's Guide to Ideology is fantastic, thanks for the recommendation!
@ngairej8 ай бұрын
Congratulations on the new arrival, and thank you so much for these podcasts. Love the way it is full of ideas and information in a very manageable way for your listeners.
@condimentofmassdestruction91148 ай бұрын
Žižek gives a pragmatic perspective on communism or revolution ideals. We can’t just adapt every new progressive ideas and/or lower our standards to be content with concessions or “choices” capitalism system offers us. Žižek wants us to understand the “choices” that capitalism offers us (not just take them at face value) while striving for communism. Žižek also advising us to learn from revolution of the past see their mistake and be realistic (looking at the material conditions and not mere ideals) while keeping in mind what we really want (our desire).
@cameronmclennan9428 ай бұрын
Really clear and concise explanation. Great stuff! Looking forward to the next part. In regard to the discussion about the confusion of left vs right, I really appreciate the argument put forward by the political anthropologist youtube channel 'What is politics?' in his video 'What the Left-Right Political Spectrum is Really About' (quote below). “The fundamental division of politics is hierarchy on the right versus equality on the left. Hierarchy meaning ranked inequality: do we want an extreme political hierarchy where one person gets to make all the decisions like a monarch or a dictator on the right, or do we want extreme political equality like direct democracy on the left, or do we want something in between on a spectrum. Economic hierarchy: do we want one person who controls all of the resources, or do we want everyone to share all the resources equally, or something in between. Cultural hierarchies: do we want one ethnic group, one religion, one gender group, one absence of religion to have all of the rights and privileges and everyone else has nothing, or do we want everyone to have equal rights and privileges, or something between. And international hierarchies: do we want one nation to dominate all of the others, or do we want all nations to be equal, or something in between.”
@matrolen8 ай бұрын
I know you've got more episodes planned. I think maybe the topic of what capitalism is turning to, or late stage capitalism and post-capitalism would be great to explore. Possibly Mark Fisher more culturally or Varoufakis's "Techno-feudalism" on the more economic vein?
@taytumpear018 ай бұрын
Up until this point, I had been struggling to understand a lot of Zizek's work. Thank you for making it so much more clear, it's just what I needed!!
@PepePerez-x1x8 ай бұрын
I always think of the imaginary register as oneself through time, and the symbolic register as oneself in space. Zizek saying you are who you are now plus who you will be is, i guess, stemming from the self perception of the imaginary register. You do crave, you feel an itch you need to scratch, a push forward to do, to change your circumstances; you do that and then you step back and see how you have changed, how much of your itch was actually scratched, if what you did worked really well, then you may incorporate it as an habit, if it was mediocre you may forget about it and only retain the memory that it does not work for you. Thats the self image, of the imaginary register; you start to see yourself better, being defined outwardly by all the things you tried and how much those things matched your desire, how much they satisfied your craving. You see yourself through time, you see your self image as X, then you try to satisfy your desire, and then your self image is actualized by incorporating that failed attempt (the realization that it didnt quite work) to your self image; If you try drawing and it really works, you may start calling yourself a drawer or an artist. On the other hand, the symbolic you, the "artist" or "drawer" tag you attach to yourself, works like space, you understand what you are or what you do not exactly in itself, by definition, but deferentially by comparing it to other tags like carpenter, designer, etc (as we understand position by reference to other objects or points of reference); two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same time, just as two symbols cannot mean the same at the same time without becoming interchangeable, and therefore, losing their relative importance; as you could use one or the other without difference. You may even find that the words dont fully capture what your self perception points towards, and could find yourself having to correct others if they call you a designer instead of an artist, recognizing the limitations of the very words to fully express your self image, and at the same time, being a possible point of advancement of your identity, when you wish to define yourself in front of others yet find that the words dont fully capture your craving for self definition. Why try to measure, in school for example, the competence of the people for a certain task, their "knowledge" or their IQ, and the measuring tape rules over us, we cast aside all other human qualities, and declare a certain parameter as our tyrannic leader. We measure symbolically, digitally, the analogical reality of that person's subjectivity, we leave all other inmensurable qualities out, such as: artistic vision, out-of-the-box thinking, maturity, emotional consciousness, innovation (even when we pretend that capitalist system pushes and rewards many of those qualities we only measure it after they have had a perceivable effect, never how much the system limits them in the first place). The example of craving for the perfect romantic relationship is really good to illustrate the distance between the symbolic and the imaginary registers. The self image that still needs development (that still hasnt seen itself enough through trial and error) cannot cope with, nor be satisfied by the material reality that the symbolic perfect love creates, as those symbols dont create the circumstances where their undefined cravings face their needed negation and resolution (lets say you are really insecure and the fact that your partner is apparently unable to cheat on you doesnt make you feel at easy but with a weird unexplainable lack). Yet the quest to find that ideal, that symbolic perfect relationship thinking it may satisfy your desire, is, in itself, a moving force were we project ourselves, it serves us as a hint, a quest marker in a game; that points us towards something that someone else has found interesting enough to name , to symbolize or put into words. That interest some group of people had placed into naming something fuels our belief in that concept, a belief that may keep on working after we've found that that thing (as all things would) didnt fully satisfy our desire. That collective interest, and the collective belief it creates form, not only religion, the credibility that any given concept has, like a critical faith mass; where if enough people think its true, then it is, and it will be because its "good enough", we already have it, and even if it doesnt fully work for us at least someone else is still believing in it, so it still has potential. And i guess the ideals of the revolutionaries also work like that, when they go too far off of what the "society's self image" is, what it can accomplish, or what circumstances it can tolerate in its everyday life. If you dont have those ideals (those symbols) you lose direction, lose to force that pushes us forward to do and to change, we lose our hope and become intoxicated with the present and with frivolous consumption; we need that extra, that surplus, that distance between the ideal and its material form, and the promise of satisfaction that the digital nature of symbols has, as it pushes us forward. Yet we also need our thinking, our pondering, our everyday circumstances with our self image placed into them, need our identity to be at a certain level of development before we can get rid of our old outdated symbols (which barely satisfy us but we keep on using cus everyone else does, and we need to communicate with each other) and change them for new ones, otherwise we are directionless and with an ever present feeling of unease, anxiety and hopelessness. Wow, wall of text, good episode man ❤ Like if you're also already eating from the trashcan all the time 🦝(?
@vtsirkinidis8 ай бұрын
All the best for your newborn son :)
@Kryptic7128 ай бұрын
No way I’ve just become a dad this year too
@RedRosa8 ай бұрын
Congratulations!!!
@nnnnsaakadamanas2188 ай бұрын
Holy fuckamoley. I am a longtime follower. Not more than 5 or 6 days ago I was thinking about you - trying to remember your name... "Philosophy now?... Philosophy Tube...??? Philosophize this??? Yes!!" I've been following zizek heavily lately - naturally conservative communist stuck out to me too. He seems to be weaving shit around everywhere, I f*ckin love it. I am so glad you've covered it. Super glad you are still making shit :-)
@massgeneral98738 ай бұрын
congratulations dude
@psychedelicjizz8 ай бұрын
Congrats on being a dad🎉
@romarssieverything96678 ай бұрын
Congrats!
@hughmanetti19088 ай бұрын
“Reason is, and ought only to be, the slave of the passions” Hume.
@kencusick63118 ай бұрын
Congratulations
@TheMegaredkirby8 ай бұрын
Just found your channel! I’m obsessed. Please keep this going 🙏🏽
@animefurry35088 ай бұрын
Great episode, a very good in depth and concise description of Zizeks positions!
@alex1701waller8 ай бұрын
Congratulations man!
@xaikken8 ай бұрын
Hooray! Another fantastic episode sir thank you
@adrianaslund86055 ай бұрын
Stephen West is a treasure.
@misterkefir8 ай бұрын
This was a really great, Thanks. Oh and also - congratulations on becoming a father! Best of luck to You and Yours ;)
@NateBostian5 ай бұрын
Congrats on your child! Time to do an episode on the philosophy of parenting!
@johanahonen86276 ай бұрын
So, first off. Sorry for my bad English. I am a communist, i have been a part of a revolutionary communist (marxist/lennenist). The word revolutionary broadly means that we dont think that we can change kapitalism from with in, and it will finally needs to be a violent upprising from the bottom (what i am saying is, we dont believe capitalism will slowly die off, it will use its power to stay in power by any means necessary), its important to stress that we dont think a revolution is possible ore wanted if we dont have a big majority on our side. We do believe that if we had a big majority on our side, there would still be a small but powerful "Bourgeoisie" class left (how they should be treated is a different topic). I live what is still calld a social democratic country. We got alot of benefits because the government was afraid of the big ussr and noticed that a majority off the people was looking to ussr for inspiration, so they gave us all the things that make my county good and famous. Slowly, they removed alot of that, especially latley. The social democratic partys lost voters, the people that lived when we got all our benefits and the new generation took it for granted and when the nationalist said "hey we are losing what makes us good..just look at our well fair system that we all love, we are losing it because of to many immigrants" the young people didn't do there own thinking, the didn't lurn from history, they just said "that makes sense". Anyway..got to get back to work 😂. Not much time to think and write.. I wonder if thats a part of the ruling class plan as well, sue feels like it some days 😂
@dtembery-taylor94978 ай бұрын
Congratulations on your child
@theorca38938 ай бұрын
One lucky kid! Congrats!
@lawrencewatts35998 ай бұрын
Congratulations ❤
@nightoftheworld8 ай бұрын
Great coverage Stephen. Do you know the @ZizekandSoOn boys/ Cadell Last @PhilosophyPortal ? That would be a seriously great discussion.. “Where two or three are gathered together in my name, I am there in the midst of them.” ◼️
@philosophizethispodcast8 ай бұрын
No, I don't. They sound cool though.
@psikeyhackr69146 ай бұрын
Do the Laws of Physics have a Left and a Right? How does planned obsolescence affect GDP? Is that a Left, Right question. The Laws of Physics cause machines to wear out. Try finding data on the annual depreciation of automobiles purchased by American consumers since Sputnik. There were 200,000,000 motor vehicles in the US in 1995. How many of those vehicles are still on the road? When was the last time you heard an economist talk about the Net Domestic Product? Guess what? Our brilliant economists do not include the depreciation of durable consumer goods in their Net Domestic Product equation. LOL Consumerism is not capitalism as defined in the 19th century. Technology increased productivity to the point that scarcity could be eliminated. But that would eliminate the ego/power games. White guys are so smart!
@ericjackson-nq4hp8 ай бұрын
❤ Before every good man is a woman that made him a better man. Congratulations to the family West-- Whoever you are, to you endless announcements --Uncle Walt
@DigtalTurtle7 ай бұрын
This episode is so great! Does anyone have any books that cover these themes? Like the themes of global capitalism creating identies, creating desires??
@loubaxo93398 ай бұрын
Didn't you mix up democratic socialist with social-democracy, or is Zizek using the term in that way? Because I always thought that democratic socialism was exactly the same as "normal" socialism but achieved through liberal democratic means instead of a revolution.
@danilthorstensson89028 ай бұрын
You are correct
@UnreliableArchivist8 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was noticing this possible term switch throughout the episode as well.
@mitchelman8 ай бұрын
Congrats to you for becoming a father of a well educated son. Nontheless do I need unload some critisism to this episode. Though you always anticipate this critique in a funny yet incomplete way like: You might say: "the individual is sacred" or "how could he possibly say he's a communist?!" Yes, I feel these comments but I still don't get (I also listened to a lot of your other episodes) why there should be any higher value to what Zizek stands for. First of course: Terminology What always strikes me is how often some (more left leaning) people tend to directly compare capitalism to socialism and thereby seeing capitalism as a holistic system for rather than from humans and society. As if it was thought out and planned like a religion or at least like a tool to keep an unhealthy but stable relation between opressors and opressed. Sure this might be one outcome here and there coming from big corporations and (again) governments but the easy and pure principle of capitalism isn't that. It's just individual freedom + private ownership. Nothing more. Not talking of corporatism. And it can be applied in dictatorships as well as in democratic republics or even some kinds of communism. It's only these two principles first and foremost and the rest are different outcomes much more rooted in human bahaviors that we can easily see in all other forms of economic systems. So would abolishing capitalism really make anything better? Yes you can condemn the superficial motivations of people and their strive for status and sometimes poor reasoning. But still, when you talk to people from former soviet countries they will tell you the status game wasn't gone at all. People living there today are much more sensitive about 'who got some better pieces of meat' and why can someone afford a little extra. There were usually tricks and ways around the official way the system was supposed to work. Everybody knew. My point is, I can't see why the economic (system) part of a society that is always an outcome yet an condition to itself should have the biggest impact on the wellbeing of humans. Especially today I see so many more ways and failings (the pandemic politics for e.g.) that could occur to make things eather more miserable or better. My concern however is that all centralistic managment and states with a growing influence in the private decisions of its citizens is prone to do worse for the future. Long live the principle of subsidiarity! Also can we try to approach the idea of capitalism from a different angle? All multinational corporations aside, let's think of what simple humans did in the past way before empires emerged and how small groups without anonymity got to survive. They trade. Always stick together and try to support the group in exchange for protection. Yes the strongest male probably had some privileges but enequality is given by nature and was therefore accepted to a certain degree. Tyrants were sorted out by the group. Now bigger groups exceeding ca 120 individuals need common rules because our brains can't handle more private relations. That's why clans in the early days weren't more people than about 100. Becoming dependent of common rules makes things comlpicated not only in the past but also in corporations and of course politics which purpose is to lay out such rules. I think that under these circumstances the organisation of an anonymous society will always contain structures of opression and they can best be solved within the smallest containments. Giving me superficial desires is not opression! I'm just a little weak and unaware sometimes like everyone else. But like everyone else I need to be responsible for my actions as good as I can. This will never change in another economic system. Even without any freedom I still need to come up with ideas to survive or get the best out of my opression. At last I'd like to point out that we absolutely come close to an agreement about a probably good way to govern. But I'd rather call it a social democracy (including capitalism) instead of democratic socialism. There is a distinct difference, right? Wish you the best.
@PepePerez-x1x8 ай бұрын
I think the main problem with capitalism is caused mainly by money itself. Money allows us to trade with little restriction, compared to barter, and this efficiency ends up having cons to our animal being, even more if combined with television, internet, mass media and al sort of technologies that also break the physical barriers between our desire, our needs and the way of satisfying them. As a comparison, think of how pornography gives us the dopamine boost, without the effort, but also without any relationship, talk, oxytocin, etc; the animal instincts or tendencies have their goals, which we inevitable try achieve as efficiently as possible, yet we are left without a subjective feeling of accomplishment since we skipped past many of the instinctual steps. We discovered the economic rules, we named them supply and demand, just as we recognized gravity and created a formula to calculate it; but the utilization of money at this level has weaponized supply and demand, we use money with disregard of the obvious implications that it has, the system is too big and we dont see the victim, so we think its okay, yet we see in society the symptoms of the system we use (namely drug addiction, depression, anxiety, adhd, chronical loneliness, suicide) As humans, we are what we do, we paint a pretty image then feel great because we are the artists that made that painting; yet in the workplace efficiency towards money making for some obscure figure, or for "progress" (for many people) takes away the pleasure in doing, the intrinsic reward, and we are only left with consumption, with an extrinsic reward, which many times doesnt fully satisfy us, because we feel alienated of ourselves since we are alienated from our doings. Money tells us how much, our product is worth, the absolute law of supply and demand judges your product, and as we are what we do, it also judges your worth. And as much as passing some laws or pretending some political vanguard could patch enough holes in the system, in reality all of our doings its already measured and judged before we have even done it, what are you gonna do?, try to study sociology, psychology, politics, theology, philosophy, and see if you can come up with a new system?, that sounds really idealistic, and ideas arent worth as much before they have been proven to work, so youre best getting some work done and earning money, otherwise you get ostracized from the circuit of social worth, where idealistic doings become just chanter that a little group of people can find appealing but may not even get you any money to survive, you can still find some relief in other system that work still outside of the money circuit, but i mean they dont quite work like one would like.
@melissasmind28466 ай бұрын
I'm in my psychedelic tub listening to this. Friday night. I love it. Hermit vibe.
@melissasmind28466 ай бұрын
I say I want to date
@Angels2ndClass8 ай бұрын
Love the show. My husband has listened to almost every episode, now. I went to your site and looked at your merchandise and noticed you use Spring. Because of you, I am starting to use Spring. Do you use them as an affiliate? If so I want to make sure you receive the credit. I did click on them from your site. I hope that works. Thank you for all the hard work you put into your podcast/KZbin episodes.
@JuaK2628 ай бұрын
Apologizing because the video ended up being long... pfff. Brother, it saddens me every time you change your tone of voice to conclusion mode, warning me that the video is about to end. Congrats on the kid!
@KnotSoProGamer8 ай бұрын
Congratulations!
@streamvoodoo8 ай бұрын
Congrats, nothing better than being a dad of a bouncing baby :) Great podcast as usual :)
@t_khon_o6 ай бұрын
We’ll done summary and congrats on the newborn!
@peterpan59068 ай бұрын
❤
@iceberg2278 ай бұрын
1/10 not enough sniffing or nose touching to be a serious discussion about Zizek.
@sina88834 күн бұрын
I find that the problem with Zizek is the same problem with most postmodern philosophers: he is great at being critic, but has no positive ideas. It’s easy to be a critic. He wants revolutionary change but warns against it. He criticizes the status quo, but other than tell us to think about a better way to do things, he has nothing. I have found John Dewey to be a much better guide for positive change because what he proposes is a method of going forward, not a final result. I think he’s a very underrated philosopher in modern conversations. Why?
@myles14518 ай бұрын
Stephen I was wondering what you thought of Zizek's take on the Foucauldian understanding that, where there is Power there is always resistance. Zizek thinks that this resistance can support or justify power (1). I was thinking of the example of eco friendly designed products, that really these products do nothing for the environment as they are still fundamentally industrially manufactured goods, that continue to reinforce the problem of consumerism. Zizek's call to action 'I'd prefer not to' to me cuts across so much of this contemporary habit of 'virtue signalling' - There's heaps of overlap between this perspective and Baudrillard's simulacra and simulation. Stay with me... In Australia there's a huge ethic or personal responsibility surrounding the issue of recycling, people act as if to be virtuous you need to fully engage with he separating of different plastics, and yet if you go and see how the waste is manged its often sent off shore where it is not recycled at all. What we are participating in then is a simulation of recycling, rather than a recycling program that having real world benefits. My point, finally, i would guess that Zizek would state that the only way through is to not recycle as recycling is participating in consumerism. Then i balance this with Camus and think that Camus may say even though its absurd to recycle without a clear outcome, none the less our role is to embrace the absurd nature of recycling, and act as if it is important anyway. What do you think Stephen? Should we recycle? 1, thedangerousmaybe.medium.com/i-would-prefer-not-to-%C5%BEi%C5%BEeks-bartleby-politics-12bd8d9de66a
@PepePerez-x1x8 ай бұрын
I think the profit motive needs less credibility, less allegiance, otherwise we end up in a sort of zero sum game like the one you mentioned of recycling, since, unless we dump a lot of money into every step of the recycling chain, one of the can easily end up ruining it all. Policing and surveillance cannot occur in each link of every chain, we need people believing in recycling (processes that are done correctly from the get go, simply because of how their systems works for the people that use them), yet at some point its justified for a person or company to just try to profit from it. Massively ignoring recycling could generate a "void" for a solution to fill in, otherwise we have a division between the people believe and act on it, and others who dont; but by only refraining of doing, and still having the looming uncertainty that recycling could actually work, we wouldnt generate that void; once the concept has been ingrained in the collective its always socially on the back of our heads. Recycling as it works today isnt really a process that inherently works, its another link in the chain of consumerism, we dont change our use-and-get-rid-of mentality that creates the pollution symptom in the first place, we only monetize another job. If we pretend to change anything then we need to try to recognize the effects our actions have in the long run (not those pretended, save the environment by giving money to an organization) but we need to change the mentality that produces so much waste in the first place, our consumption of things should not become another link in the chain of capital, an investment in recycling facilities, a new way of ecological consumerism; i guess we basically need to be unproductive, a bad investment, and i dont mean doing nothing, just do things that dont make the wheel spin more faster, doing things that are not efficient for capital, that dont maximize nor look for profit, things that are done and finished by ourselves, without any expectation of exponential growth.
@ollimekatl8 ай бұрын
Congrats on the new family member! Many of these thoughts sound strange and foreign to a native person of the americas mind. What we are taught is to strive to lead a single life, to have one face and one heart (ie not be two faced saying one thing with your mouth and having another thing in your heart), to create beautiful memories to be remembered by when we are no longer here. I desire to lead a full and complete life and the only way I know how to do that is by following my ancestors philosophy, which is that we are all like a seed that is flowering out, creating beautiful colors, scents, and memories. Why? Because we are not guaranteed anything after this life, so we might as well make this life enjoyable. Constantly desiring objects doesn't sound enjoyable, or healthy.
@Existential8Ball6 ай бұрын
Professional philosopher: Random KZbin comment: “Ya Zizek is the dumb man’s smart philosopher.”
@juvenalhahne77504 ай бұрын
Hoje nao estou mesmo com.paciencia. Bastou ouvir por um minuto o que vai ser discutido -- que politicamente ninguem e so de esquerda ou direita -- para logo perceber que a logorreia do narrador nao vai resistir a complicar e enrolar pelo prazer, parece, de ouvir a propria voz...
@hughmanetti19088 ай бұрын
Conservative Communist?
@ip-sum6 ай бұрын
Why isn't this the content of the "news" 😂😂😂😂😂
@hannesadman61168 ай бұрын
Hi dad, I'm born
@SweetKale-e3m10 күн бұрын
How is he talking without his mouth moving? Why is he grey and who wears a toga. None of this has made any sense so far.
@tylerkneer39848 ай бұрын
NH N
@Appleblade6 ай бұрын
That assertion about Capitalism and the antagonism inherent in its class struggle is, at worst, a stupid definition (a capitalist society can be composed entirely of entrepreneurs) and at best an empirical observation that takes accidents as essentials. Perhaps he was never an entrepreneur... but after owning a small business in my 20s (with friends lining up to work for me), I was thrilled to quit and be 'exploited' for a wage that removed the difficulties and stress of self-reliance. And that was in the dying gasps of the industrial age, not quite into the information age, where the work the overlords ask their exploited wage slaves to perform are things like data entry, phone work, coding, computer support, and other lazy monkey tasks. No... the only way to sell people on the communist picture of class struggle and oppression is to suggest self-reliance is out of reach, and to also teach them envy toward the successful and or lucky isn't a moral failing, but rather righteous indignation (envy being the preference that if you don't have something, I shouldn't have it either).
@suamz33087 ай бұрын
iT WaSn'T rEaL cOmMuNisM
@christinemartin638 ай бұрын
So ... take some common sense, mix in some neologisms, fold in a little academic jargon, add a pinch of hyperbole, half-bake it all, and--in your loudest, fastest-talking huckster voice--present the whole hot mess as your "original" recipe for self-actualization. Little wonder some have figured out that Emperor Zizek is wearing no clothes. (What a con.)
@philosophizethispodcast8 ай бұрын
I respect your opinion. I think you were the one that said last video that literature has been a better source for you at novel insights about life/thinking? I've been thinking about that comment the last couple weeks! Thanks for it. It reminds me strongly of Nussbaum and how she inspires me to read more fiction. How the medium itself is just far more suited to delivering messaging about real human perspectives. If that is along the lines of where you're coming from then I can totally understand not wanting to invest a long time in Zizek, but if you're looking for something truly original in his synthesis of Lacan/Hegel definitely check out the International Journal of Zizek Studies (zizekstudies.org/) or some of the peer reviewed work and responses by academics. Thanks for listening and for coming back if this series isn't your favorite. Sign of a badass thinker. Be well! :)
@christinemartin638 ай бұрын
@@philosophizethispodcast I love your channel. I've listened to all your lectures, as well as all of Michael Sugrue's. I do not like Zizek 🫣😜.
@sonarbangla87118 ай бұрын
Zizek isn't a philosopher, he is a dedicated film maker and honest about the demonic nature of humanity.
@robertwilson-lq1lr8 ай бұрын
Z is the ultimate Spinx without a secret. Not worth your time, IMO.
@franekkessler4897 ай бұрын
Yeah, saying "you didn't actually read Marx" doesn't counter the fact, that all communist/socialist countries failed
@cobracommander81336 ай бұрын
🤡
@poojachougule47318 ай бұрын
Shocking, that person who is emersed in philosophy and knowledge of this world has chosen to bring a innocent child in this Hell !